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🗺️ Taiwan Self-Travel Route Showdown 2026

Where to Go in Taiwan?
North Loop vs South Loop vs East Coast

Three complete routes, one honest comparison — days needed, budget, headline attractions, transport and which loop actually fits your travel style.

🗺️ 3 Routes Compared 📅 5–7 Days Each 💰 NT$22k–42k Mid-Range 🚊 Train + Bus + Drive
The Planning Problem

Taiwan Is Small Enough to Loop — Big Enough to Overwhelm

Taiwan fits inside a 10-day itinerary. That's both its greatest gift and its biggest planning trap. With one island and three distinct travel personalities — the buzzing, neon-lit north; the culturally rich, foodie-dense south; and the raw, dramatic east coast — first-timers often freeze trying to fit everything in.

This guide cuts through the noise. We compare North Loop (Taipei and its surroundings), South Loop (Taichung → Sun Moon Lake → Alishan → Tainan → Kaohsiung → Kenting) and East Coast (Hualien → Taroko Gorge → Taitung) across seven dimensions — days, budget, transport, crowds, season, headline attraction and English support. Then we tell you who should choose which.

One honest note upfront: Taroko Gorge on the East Coast sustained significant damage in the April 2024 earthquake. Parts of the park remained closed or restricted into 2026. The East Coast is recovering — but plan for a different (and still wonderful) experience compared to pre-earthquake visits.

🏙️
North Loop
Taipei-centric, urban energy, world-class night markets and mountain day trips
🌲
South Loop
Taiwan's food capital, tea mountains, colonial history and tropical beaches
⛰️
East Coast
Gorge hiking, indigenous culture, surf towns and the Pacific Ocean
🔄
Combo Route
10 days covering the best of all three — the classic Taiwan circuit
Quick Verdict

Which Route Should You Choose?

Four common traveler types — here's the short answer before we go deep.

First Trip, 5–6 Days

Do the North Loop. Taipei alone fills 3 days. Add Jiufen, Shifen and Yehliu as day trips. It's the most accessible, best-connected and most forgiving of missed transport connections. You won't run out of things to do.

🍜

Food & Culture Focus, 7+ Days

Go South Loop. Tainan is the undisputed food capital. Kaohsiung adds urban energy with harbour views. The HSR makes city-hopping easy. Add Sun Moon Lake and Alishan if your timeline allows — both justify a full day each.

🧗

Nature & Adventure Priority

Choose the East Coast. Even with Taroko partially restricted, the Hualien–Taitung coastal road, Qingshui Cliffs, Dulan surf village and Taitung Hot Springs together create a completely different Taiwan — wild, quiet and genuinely remote.

🗺️

10+ Days, Want the Full Picture

Run the Combo Route: Taipei (3 nights) → Hualien (2 nights) → Taitung (1 night) → Kaohsiung (2 nights) → Tainan (1 night) → Taichung (1 night) → back to Taipei. Doable, unhurried and deeply rewarding.

Side-by-Side Comparison

All 3 Routes in One Table

Budgets are mid-range estimates (3-star hotel, mix of transport). Actual spend varies widely.

Dimension 🏙️ North Loop 🌲 South Loop ⛰️ East Coast
Days Needed 4–5 days 6–7 days 4–5 days
Headline Attraction Taipei 101 + Night Markets Tainan Old Town + Alishan Taroko Gorge (partial)
Transport MRT + Train HSR + Local Train Scooter / Car Hire
Mid-Range Budget ~NT$22–35k / ฿22–35k ~NT$28–42k / ฿28–42k ~NT$25–38k / ฿25–38k
Best Season Oct–Dec (autumn) Oct–Apr (cool & dry) Mar–May / Oct–Nov
Crowd Level High (weekends) Moderate Low–Moderate
English Support Excellent Good Limited outside cities

⚠️ THB estimates use approximately NT$1 = THB 1 for rough cross-currency comparison. Verify current rates before budgeting.

Route Deep Dive — North Loop

🏙️ North Loop — Taipei & Its Orbit

The easiest entry point to Taiwan. A world-class city surrounded by mountains, hot springs and coastal villages.

The North Loop centres on Taipei — Asia's most underrated city, in our honest opinion. Three days in the city barely scratches the surface: Taipei 101's Skyline 460 observation deck, the National Palace Museum (the finest collection of Chinese artefacts outside Beijing), Longshan Temple at dawn, Shilin Night Market after 6 p.m. Add the CKS Memorial, Ximending shopping district and a MRT ride to the top of Elephant Mountain for the iconic 101 skyline shot.

From Taipei, day trips fill the remaining days effortlessly: Jiufen and Shifen (the hilltop old street that inspired Spirited Away + sky lanterns), Yehliu Geopark (alien-rock coastal formations), Beitou Hot Springs (a 30-minute MRT ride), and Yangmingshan National Park (volcanic craters and cherry blossoms in spring). For a longer overnight excursion, Hualien is accessible by train in 2.5 hours.

5-Day Outline: Day 1 Taipei city centre (101, NPM, Longshan). Day 2 Ximending, CKS, Elephant Mountain sunset. Day 3 Jiufen + Shifen day trip. Day 4 Yehliu + coastal drive or Beitou hot spring. Day 5 Yangmingshan or relaxed shopping + departure.

💰 5-Day Mid-Range Budget NT$22,000–35,000 per person · Hotel 3★ NT$2,200–4,500/night · MRT/bus transport NT$100–300/day · Meals NT$500–1,200/day · Attractions NT$500–1,500/day

Pros

  • Easiest transport — MRT covers nearly everything
  • Best English-language support of any Taiwan city
  • Widest accommodation range from NT$700 hostel to NT$25,000 luxury suite
  • World-class night markets and food scene
  • Multiple day trips within 1–2 hours by train or bus

Cons

  • Can feel too urban if you want nature and quiet
  • Popular sites (Jiufen, Shifen) get very crowded on weekends
  • July–September typhoon season brings disruptions
  • Limited beach options (nearest good beach is 2+ hours)
Route Deep Dive — South Loop

🌲 South Loop — Tea Mountains, Old Cities & Beaches

Taiwan's food and history backbone. The south rewards slow travel — take at least 6 days to appreciate it properly.

The South Loop connects Taiwan's most culturally layered destinations along the HSR spine. Start in Taichung (Taiwan's third city — Rainbow Village, Fengjia Night Market, contemporary art scene), then head to Sun Moon Lake for a half-day boat ride on Taiwan's largest lake, framed by misty mountains. From there, the mountain train to Alishan winds through ancient cedar forests to an alpine plateau where sunrise over a cloud sea is one of Taiwan's most famous (and crowded) experiences.

Tainan is the undisputed culinary capital — 400 years of history packed into crumbling Dutch forts, candlelit temples and alley kitchens. Budget a full day minimum. Finally, Kaohsiung delivers a modern harbour city with the Lotus Pond pagodas, Cijin Island seafood and a genuine local vibe less tourist-saturated than Taipei. For beach enthusiasts, Kenting National Park is another 1.5 hours south — Taiwan's tropical beach playground, best in spring and autumn.

6-Day Outline: Day 1 Taichung (Rainbow Village, Fengjia Night Market). Day 2 Sun Moon Lake + afternoon travel south. Day 3 Alishan sunrise + descent to Tainan. Day 4 Tainan deep dive (forts, temples, food). Day 5 Kaohsiung (Lotus Pond, Cijin, night life). Day 6 optional Kenting or fly home from Kaohsiung.

💰 6-Day Mid-Range Budget NT$28,000–42,000 per person · HSR + local trains NT$2,000–4,000 total · Hotel 3★ NT$2,000–4,500/night · Alishan train NT$500–750/ticket · Meals NT$500–1,400/day

Pros

  • Taiwan's richest food and cultural history corridor
  • HSR makes intercity travel fast and comfortable
  • More authentic local atmosphere outside Taipei
  • Alishan and Sun Moon Lake are genuinely stunning
  • Kaohsiung airport for easy fly-in/fly-out

Cons

  • Alishan sunrise is crowded — arrive on the early morning train or stay overnight
  • Side trips (Sun Moon Lake, Kenting) require careful scheduling
  • Summer heat in Tainan and Kaohsiung is intense (May–Sept)
  • English-language menus less common than in Taipei
Route Deep Dive — East Coast

⛰️ East Coast — Gorges, Surf Towns & Silence

Taiwan's wild side. Fewer tourists, dramatic Pacific scenery and a completely different cultural layer — Amis and Puyuma indigenous heritage.

⚠️ Taroko Earthquake Note (2026): The April 2024 earthquake damaged parts of Taroko Gorge significantly. As of 2026, some scenic areas and trails remain closed or under repair. Hualien city and the coastal highway are open. Always check the Taroko National Park official website for current closures before your trip. Even a partially open Taroko remains impressive.

Hualien is the East Coast gateway — a small city with a frontier feel, ringed by the Central Mountain Range and facing the Pacific. The morning train from Taipei takes under 2.5 hours along one of Asia's most scenic rail journeys, hugging clifftops above the ocean. Taroko Gorge — even in its current partial-access state — delivers marble canyon walls, turquoise rivers and trailheads into dense subtropical forest. The Shakadang Trail and Swallow Grotto section are among the most accessible and often open sections.

South of Hualien, the East Rift Valley (Huadong Valley) is a cycling and driving paradise: rolling farmland between two mountain ranges, hot springs at Ruisui, and tiny indigenous villages. Taitung, the southern anchor, has a slower pace still: Brown Avenue cycling, Zhiben Hot Springs, the serene Peinan Archaeological Site and quick boat access to the pristine Green Island (Lyudao) — one of Taiwan's best snorkelling destinations.

5-Day Outline: Day 1 Hualien arrive, city explore + night market. Day 2 Taroko accessible sections (full day). Day 3 East Rift Valley drive or cycle south. Day 4 Taitung — Brown Avenue, Zhiben Hot Springs. Day 5 optional Green Island ferry or return north by train.

💰 5-Day Mid-Range Budget NT$25,000–38,000 per person · Taipei–Hualien train NT$450–840 · Scooter/car hire NT$800–2,500/day · Hotel 3★ NT$1,800–3,500/night · Green Island ferry NT$1,200–1,500 return

Pros

  • Taiwan's most dramatic natural scenery
  • Far fewer tourists than Taipei or the South Loop
  • Genuine indigenous cultural experiences (food, festivals)
  • Coastal highway drive is world-class
  • Add Green Island for pristine coral reefs

Cons

  • Taroko Gorge still partially closed post-earthquake (verify current status)
  • Limited public transport outside cities — scooter or car hire necessary
  • English support weakest of the three routes
  • Typhoon season (July–October) hits East Coast hardest
The Full Circuit

🔄 Combo Route — 10 Days, All Three Loops

The classic Taiwan loop. Fly in and out of Taipei. Cover the highlights without feeling rushed.

If you have 10 days and want the complete Taiwan picture, the standard circuit flows: Taipei (3 nights) → Hualien (2 nights, East Coast) → Taitung (1 night) → Kaohsiung (2 nights, south) → Tainan (1 night) → Taichung (1 night, optional) → Taipei (fly home). This covers three distinct landscapes, the full food spectrum and both modern and ancient Taiwan without backtracking.

Transport tip: book the Puyuma Express or Taroko Express for the Taipei–Hualien leg (reserved seats essential). Use the HSR for Kaohsiung→Tainan→Taichung→Taipei. This combination costs roughly NT$3,500–5,000 total in rail tickets — far less than a rental car — and keeps you out of Taipei driving traffic.

Budget estimate for 10 days, mid-range: NT$50,000–75,000 per person, all-in (accommodation, transport, food, attractions). Backpackers can do it for NT$30,000. Luxury travelers will spend NT$100,000+.

💡
Buy HSR tickets in advance

Taiwan HSR sells Early Bird discount tickets (up to 35% off) online. Book 14+ days ahead via Klook or the T Express app. Puyuma/Taroko Express reserved seats sell out weeks in advance during Golden Week, Chinese New Year and summer. Plan your dates before booking accommodation.

🎫 Taiwan HSR Tickets on Klook →
Decision Matrix

5 Traveler Types — Which Route Wins?

📷

The Instagram-First Traveler

North Loop wins. Jiufen alleys, Elephant Mountain shot, Pingxi sky lanterns and Taipei 101 at night. If you're chasing visual variety, the south offers Rainbow Village and Cijin Island sunsets, but the north delivers density of iconic shots per square kilometre.

🧘

The Slow Traveler (Fewer Stops)

East Coast wins. Hualien and Taitung are genuinely slow — fewer tourists, longer meals, more space to sit on a beach and do nothing. The East Coast rewards travelers who measure a trip in moments, not sights crossed off.

👪

Families with Kids

North Loop is most practical (MRT, English-friendly, Leofoo Village Theme Park, Maokong Gondola). South Loop adds the Tainan Chimei Museum and Kaohsiung's Pier-2 Art Center as good kid-friendly stops.

🏍️

Adventure Seekers

East Coast wins cleanly: gorge trekking, scooter touring the Pacific coast highway, surfing at Dulan, snorkelling at Green Island, white-water rafting at Xiuguluan River. The south adds paragliding above Puli and cycling Sun Moon Lake.

🍞

The Serious Foodie

South Loop wins convincingly. Tainan alone has more distinct local dishes than most entire countries — oyster vermicelli, milkfish belly congee, coffin toast, dan zai noodles, shrimp rolls. Add Kaohsiung's night market seafood, Taichung's bubble tea origin story (Chun Shui Tang claims the invention) and you have a world-class eating journey. The North Loop counters with Taipei's Din Tai Fung, Michelin Guide restaurants and Shilin Night Market — it's close, but Tainan is irreplaceable.

📍 Where to Stay

Where to Stay Along Your Route · Pick the Right Base

Hotels we've fully reviewed — compare prices across 3 booking sites, direct booking links.

Top 10 Taipei Hotels → Top 10 Tainan Hotels →
Frequently Asked Questions

Taiwan Route Questions Answered Honestly

How many days do I need for a Taiwan self-drive trip?
A minimum of 5 days covers the North Loop (Taipei area). The South Loop needs at least 6–7 days to reach Kaohsiung via Taichung, Sun Moon Lake and Alishan without rushing. The East Coast (Hualien–Taroko–Taitung) works in 4–5 days. A combo route covering highlights of all three loops realistically requires 10–12 days.
Is the East Coast safe to visit after the 2024 earthquake?
The April 2024 earthquake caused significant damage to parts of Taroko Gorge. As of 2026, Taroko National Park remains partially closed — specific trails and scenic areas are inaccessible or under repair. Hualien city and the Hualien–Taitung coastal highway are open and recovering well. Always check the Taroko National Park official website for current trail status before visiting.
Can I do Taiwan by train or do I need to rent a car?
Taiwan's train and HSR network handles the North and South loops well — you can travel comfortably between Taipei, Taichung, Kaohsiung and Tainan without a car. The East Coast is harder without your own wheels: the coastal road between Hualien and Taitung is stunning but public bus service is infrequent. Renting a scooter in Hualien or joining a guided tour is a practical solution.
Which route has the best food?
Every route delivers outstanding food, but the South Loop edges ahead for variety: Tainan is Taiwan's historic food capital (oyster vermicelli, milkfish congee, coffin toast), while Kaohsiung adds excellent seafood. The North Loop offers Taipei's world-class night markets and Din Tai Fung. The East Coast specialises in indigenous Amis cuisine — less varied but genuinely unique.
What is the cheapest route in Taiwan?
The North Loop is the most budget-friendly — you can cover Taipei and its day trips entirely by MRT and public transport, keeping accommodation costs competitive in a hostel-dense city. The East Coast comes second (lower hotel prices, fewer expensive attractions). The South Loop covers more ground and involves more intercity transport, making it slightly pricier overall.
Plan Your Taiwan Trip

Route decided —
now plan the rest of your Taiwan trip

Visas, eSIM, MRT passes, airport transfers and day-trip itineraries — our Taiwan practical info hub covers everything you need before you fly.

Plan Ahead

Route chosen — now fill in the details

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